Abducted Shahbaz Taseer rescued from Balochistan after five years

Published March 8, 2016
A photo of Shahbaz Taseer released by the ISPR after his rescue shows the young man has grown his hair and beard out in his years of captivity. - ISPR
A photo of Shahbaz Taseer released by the ISPR after his rescue shows the young man has grown his hair and beard out in his years of captivity. - ISPR

QUETTA: The son of slain former Punjab governor Salman Taseer, Shahbaz Taseer, was recovered by security and intelligence forces from Balochistan’s Kuchlak area on Tuesday, nearly five years after his abduction in 2011.

“Intelligence agencies have recovered Shahbaz Taseer from an area near Kuchlak, Balochistan,” said a statement released by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).

The military shared photos of Shahbaz with a short statement that he is "hale and hearty".

─Photo: ISPR
─Photo: ISPR

He has now been shifted from Kuchlak to Quetta and is reportedly in stable condition, a security official told Dawn.com. Doctors were also called to conduct a medical checkup, he added.

Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, who was briefing the Senate on the National Action Plan when the news of Shahbaz’ recovery broke, also confirmed the development.

“I have some good news. I just received information regarding the recovery of Salman Taseer’s son.”

The 'raid' to recover Shahbaz

Aitzaz Goraya, head of the Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) Balochistan told Dawn.com: “Shahbaz Taseer has been recovered from Kuchlak area of Balochistan.”

“Secret services and CTD personnel conducted a raid at a compound in Kuchlak and recovered a person identified as Shahbaz Taseer.”

Kuchlak is a windy town some 25 kilometres north of Balochistan capital Quetta. The district also houses a large number of Afghan refugees.

Security sources are yet to confirm the arrest of kidnappers during the recovery operation.

Goraya described Shahbaz, who is in his early thirties, as being in “stable” health.

“We surrounded the compound and we raided it. We didn't find anyone. A single person was there and he told us my name is Shahbaz and my father's name is Salman Taseer," he said.

But the owner of a roadside restaurant in Kuchlak told reporters that Taseer was recovered after he came to his restaurant on foot on Tuesday evening, made a phone call and then personnel from the Frontier Corps came and picked him up.

Al-Saleem Hotel.─DawnNews
Al-Saleem Hotel.─DawnNews

“He had grown long hair with a scruffy beard and was frantically asking for a telephone or mobile phone” the owner of Al-Saleem hotel told reporters in Kuchlak.

“He ate food here, paid a bill of Rs350 and then called someone from a waiter's mobile,” the owner said, adding that minutes later FC personnel arrived.

Nearly 5 years in captivity

Shahbaz was kidnapped from Lahore on Aug 26, 2011, near his company’s head office in Gulberg area. He was driving towards the offices of the First Capital Group off M.M. Alam Road in Gulberg when he was intercepted by the kidnappers.

The abductors who, according to witnesses, used a Prado jeep and a motorcycle, bundled the young Taseer into the four-wheeler and rushed away unimpeded.

No details on the whereabouts of Shahbaz had earlier been made public. However, there were speculations that he was held captive in restive Waziristan by a group that was negotiating the release of Salman Taseer’s killer Mumtaz Qadri and other prisoners.

There were also unverified reports of Shahbaz being killed in a drone strike in Waziristan.

The Pakistani Taliban have never officially confirmed their involvement in the kidnapping, but a militant source told AFP that the army operation in the tribal areas had made it “difficult” for the group to keep him.

“That's why they preferred to set him free,” the source said.

The militant commanders have privately told AFP in the past Taseer was being kept somewhere in the tribal areas of North and South Waziristan, but he was moved after Operation Zarb-i-Azb was launched in North Waziristan in 2014.

A second militant source said the Taliban had been demanding up to Rs2 billion for Taseer's release.

Shahbaz Taseer's father-in-law Salman Ghani also confirmed his freedom, but did not give any details.

Security analyst Imtiaz Gul said it was possible a ransom had been paid and that Shahbaz had been abandoned by his abductors once they received the money.

The Pakistani Taliban “are a group of mercenaries with clear links to organised crime”, he said.

The development comes just a week after Salman Taseer’s assassin was executed at Rawalpindi's Adiala Jail.

Shahbaz Taseer. –Photo courtesy Twitter
Shahbaz Taseer. –Photo courtesy Twitter

In another high-profile kidnapping, son of former premier Yousaf Raza Gilani, Ali Haider Gilani was abducted from Multan on May 9, 2013, outside a Pakistan People’s Party office in the run-up to the 2013 general elections.

Yousaf Raza Gilani, while congratulating Taseer family on the recovery of Shahbaz Taseer, expressed hope that his son “Ali Gilani will also be recovered soon”.

Ali Gilani was leaving a PPP street corner meeting outside the house of a local supporter at Matti Tal Road in Farrukh Town when he was kidnapped three years back.

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